iBank for iPad a stellar full-featured personal financial app

Jeffery Battersby |
June 26, 2013

If you're looking for a real alternative to Quicken on your iPad, try iBank for iPad.

In the world of personal financial applications, if you're not using a Web-based application, then the desktop is king. Whether you're using the age-old (and aging) Quicken, or one of the many other applications that have attempted to fill gaps left by Quicken, you've usually been anchored to a desktop application. With the recent release of iBank for iPad, a desktop app may no longer be a necessity.

The problem with most iOS-based financial apps is that they can't really stand alone. They either aggregate Web-based information, offering few options for editing or manually entering that data, or they work as display tools for information you're tracking via a desktop app. iBank for iPad used to be that type of application, requiring iBank for the Mac to be truly useful, but that's no longer the case. While iBank for Mac is a great addition to iBank for iPad, iBank for iPad can now handle all your budgeting, banking, and investment needs on its own.

iBank for iPad uses "Books" as a metaphor for collections of accounts. When you open the app, you are given the option of either creating a Book that syncs with the iBank for Mac app or creating a stand-alone Book. With a stand-alone Book, you can opt to enter all of your transactions by hand or you can download all your financial data via the subscription-based Direct Access. It's this last option that makes iBank for iPad shine. Direct Access, a feature developed by IGG Software, allows iBank to automatically connect to and download transactions from all of your financial-service companies.

To my surprise and pleasure, iBank's Direct Access service is not limited to a selection of well-known banks, which has been the case with every other service of that type that I've tried. Not only can you connect to and download transactions from such banks as Wells Fargo and Chase, but you can also connect to obscure banks such as the teacher's credit union my wife belongs to.

Whether you download the transactions directly or enter them yourself, editing and categorizing your transactions is a snap. Double-tapping any transaction reveals a small menu offering options to edit, categorize, or delete a transaction. In practice, though, I found that when I used Direct Access, I didn't need to use the tools--iBank for iPad almost always categorized my transactions correctly.

iBank for iPad offers a very effective budgeting tool you can use to create budgets for any of the categories you've created; you can then use those budgets to track your income and expenses. In future versions of the tool, however, I'd like to see some way to take the expense information I've already collected for a specific category and use that as a starting point for a specific budget item. So, for example, if iBank already knows that I've spent an average of $100 per month over the last three months for groceries, the budget for the groceries category should already have $100 in the budget amount field. As it is, you have to first figure out how much you've spent before you can figure out a realistic budget for a given category.